STUDENT PERFORMANCE SERIES STUDY GUIDE / April 23 & 24, 2009 / Newmark Theatre Dear Educators, We look forward to seeing you at Left Unsaid, the next of Oregon Ballet Theatre’s Student Performance Series to be held at the Newmark Theatre at 11:00 on April 23rd and 24th. The following Study Guide is designed to provide information for you to explore with your students. It includes information about the three works that will be seen at the show. The first piece will beTarantella , followed by Left Unsaid, and the final piece will be Il Distratto. Kathi Martuza and Adrian Fry in Nicolo Fonte’s Left Unsaid Photo by Andy Batt The Study Guide includes information about each of the ballets, each composer and each choreographer. On behalf of all of Oregon Ballet Theatre I thank you for Interspersed throughout the Study Guide you will see bringing your students to the theater and for taking time to sections entitled “Think about it...” and “Dance about it...” enhance their experience by talking about the performance These sections offer a series of questions for students to before and after the show. broaden their thinking, or movement activities that allow students to physically explore elements that will be seen See you at the Newmark, at the performance. Since the Study Guide is designed for a broad range of students, teachers are encouraged to Kasandra Gruener, MA use the guide as a starting point and are encouraged to Director of Education and Outreach play with the suggestions. If you find that you have had a particularly interesting teaching moment as a result of the ideas here, please send me a note. I am developing a way for teachers to share ideas about including dance in schools. CONTENTS: •Tarantella - Overview, Composer, Choreographer Please check the Student Performance Series page at •Left Unsaid - Overview, Composer, Choreographer •Il Distratto - Overview, Composer, Choreographer OBT’s website (www.obt.org) for important downloads for SPS attendees. TARANTELLA OBT will open the Student Performance Series at the brief, this explosive pas de deux typifies the ways in which Newmark Theatre with a short ballet called Tarantella. The George Balanchine expanded the traditional vocabulary ballet was choreographed by George Balanchine to music of classical ballet. A classical pas de deux has a certain entitled Grand Tarantelle for Piano and Orchestra, Op. 67 form—first the dancers do a slower dance together, then (ca. 1866) by Louis Moreau Gottschalk. The music was they both have solos that showcase their specific talents, reconstructed and orchestrated for New York City Ballet culminating in a dance together that seems almost by Hershy Kay. competitive in its difficulty.B alanchine infuses this pas de deux with fast paced movements at all times and includes Tarantella is an effervescent dance for two people—a pas folk dance steps, such as the man moving forward in a de deux. It is a virtuosic showcase of nimbly danced steps difficult knee walking step while striking his tambourine by a man and woman including a profusion of jumps, spins, at the foot of the ballerina who is traveling forward doing and quick changes of direction. They both joyfully share the a challenging series of turns. Many audiences applaud at striking of a tambourine and are dressed in costumes that the sight of this part of the dance—you can too! make one think of traditional Italian festivals. Although THE STUDENT KUSE PERFORMANCE SERIES IS FOUNDATION SPONSORED BY STUDENT PERFORMANCE SERIES STUDY GUIDE / April 23 & 24, 2009 / Newmark Theatre COMPOSER: LOUIS MOREAU GOTTSCHALK (1829 – 1869) Though Louis Moreau in 1862, included 85 concerts (all at different locations) in just Gottshalk is considered four and a half months. In his diary he wrote, “Arrived half past among the first American eight at the hotel, took in a hurry a cup of bad tea, and away to composers to attain a high business. One herring for dinner! nine hours on the train! and, in standard in the world of spite of everything, five hundred persons who have paid that you classical music, he spent may give them two hours of poesy, of passion, and of inspiration. much of his short life I confess to you secretly that they certainly will be cheated this studying and performing evening.” outside the United States. Gottschalk lived and performed in Cuba, South America Gottschalk was born to a and the Caribbean for extended periods of time—his concerts Jewish businessman from were tremendously successful all across South America and London and a white Haitian sometimes took the form of “monster concerts” involving up Creole in New Orleans, and to 650 performers—and he happily incorporated their musical was partly raised by his influences and traditions into his compositions, employing Grandmother Buslé and his syncopated rhythms, jagged melodic lines and folk dance nurse Sally, who had both elements. been born in Saint-Domingue (later known as Haiti). With this background, as a child he was exposed to a wide variety of musical traditions. Louis Moreau Gottshalk Gottschalk was recognized as a wunderkind by the New Orleans bourgeois establishment when, in 1840, he gave his informal public debut as a pianist at the new St. Charles Hotel. At the age of 13, he sailed to Europe for classical training in music. In a letter to his mother he wrote, “I definitely expect that in two years or perhaps less I shall be earning a living on my own.” The Paris Conservatoire, however, initially rejected his application on the grounds of his nationality. His examiner commented that “America is a country of steam engines.” In the years to follow, despite the initial rejection by the musical establishment, he built a career as a piano virtuoso, prompting Frédéric Chopin to predict that Gottschalk would become one of the foremost pianists of the century. Back home, he established himself as a major figure in American musical life, partly as a result of tremendous hard work, as is evident from his travel schedule which, at one point Louis Moreau Gottshalk THINK ABOUT IT... Wunderkind is a German word that translates to “wonder Today, all around America, cities put on festivals that showcase child.” It describes someone who is successful or shows great many forms of art. In Portland, for instance, we have the multi- talent at a young age. Do you know of any wunderkind? week Portland Institute for Contemporary Art’s (PICA) Time Based Art festival, in which gallery showings and many types of What was The Paris Conservatoire examiner trying to say about performances occur. Musically, Portland hosts a Jazz Festival, America and Gottschalk’s potential to be a great artist when he Blues Festival and Battle of the Bands events. Do you ever said, “America is a country of steam engines.” attend these performances with your family or friends? Would these be considered to be “monster concerts” in our time? Why would Gottschalk write a diary? How does it help us now to know about his experience and his time? Do you keep a diary? KASANDRA GRUENER, MA, DIRECTOR OF EDUCATION & OUTREACH / 503.227.0977 / [email protected] / www.obt.org/outreach_youth.html STUDENT PERFORMANCE SERIES STUDY GUIDE / April 23 & 24, 2009 / Newmark Theatre CHOREOGRAPHER: GEORGE BALANCHINE (1904 – 1983) Though Russian-born George Balanchine grew to be one of to British traditional tunes, Stars and Stripes to famous John the greatest choreographers in history, at first he didn’t want Philip Sousa marches, and the Italian-flavoredTarantella on this to be a ballet dancer. When he was nine, he tagged along as program. Balanchine even choreographed for his cooperative cat his sister auditioned for the Czar’s Imperial Ballet Academy in Mourka. St. Petersburg. The teachers felt he had a good physique for dancing, and persuaded his mother that he too should enroll in the ballet boarding school. Georgi (as he was known) was homesick and ran away, only to be brought back to his studies. He felt ballet was dreadfully dull, and consoled himself by playing the piano or reading Jules Vern’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and the adventures of Sherlock Holmes. Then he was cast as Cupid in The Sleeping Beauty at the Czar’s Maryinsky Theater, George Balanchine (center) with and was hooked forever by his sister and brother the magic of performance. As a young man, Balanchine sustained a serious knee injury while dancing for Serge Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes, and turned his concentration to choreography. He immigrated to the United States in 1933 under the sponsorship of Lincoln Kirstein. With Balanchine enjoyed “rehearsing” with Mourka. There is a ballet step in years of on-again-off-again effort, they succeeded in establishing which the dancer jumps to the side while tucking both feet up under the New York City Ballet in 1948, where Balanchine was Ballet body, effecting a diamond shape in the air. It is called pas de chat and Master in Chief for the rest of his life. means “step of the cat.” Look for this in Tarantella. He made over 400 dances, with an astonishing breadth of inspiration. Some were story ballets, others were abstract like a modern painting. Some were for Broadway musicals or Hollywood Look for pas de chat and other ballet steps in a ballet movie extravaganzas, most were for his own company of ballet dictionary at this website: dancers. Balanchine liked to make rousing, purely entertaining http://www.abt.org/education/dictionary/index.html ballets that tapped into national character, such as Union Jack, THINK ABOUT IT... George Balanchine might not have become a great American pre-school/kindergarten.
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